Scientists To Bid A Bittersweet Farewell To Rosetta, The Comet Chaser

Rosetta's mission control specialists at the European Space Operations Center in Darmstadt, Germany, were jubilant on Jan. 20, 2014, after getting back the first signals that their mission's probe had "woken up" on the comet's surface.

Juergen Mai
/ ESA

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Originally published on September 29, 2016 10:24 pm

On Friday, the Rosetta spacecraft will smack into the icy surface of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and go silent. Scientists with the historic mission are wondering how they'll feel as the orbiter makes its death-dive toward the comet that has been its traveling companion for more than two years.

"There's mixed emotions here," says Matt Taylor of the European Space Agency, who is the project scientist for Rosetta. "You know, people have invested their lives and their mentality, I think, as well — their psychology — on this mission. I really couldn't tell you what I'm going to feel."

Mission controllers in Darmstadt, Germany, will command the spacecraft to do a specific maneuver on Thursday evening that will put it on a collision course with the comet. "From that point," Taylor says, "it's free fall, effectively."

The whole way down, the spacecraft will be collecting data and images that it will stream back to Earth in real time.

"And as soon as any one part of that spacecraft touches the comet, it will tilt the spacecraft," Taylor says. "The antenna won't be pointing at the Earth, and we lose the signal. We'll know that it's impacted when we can't hear from it anymore."

The finale will send Rosetta down to explore an interesting region of the comet that has big pits. The walls of these pits seem to have a bumpy, almost lizard-skin texture, says Taylor, who notes that the goose-bump-like features are a few feet across.

"We think they're fundamentally important in the make-up of the comet," Taylor says. "Those bumps potentially are the building blocks from which the larger-scale comet is made."

To get high-resolution images of those features in the walls of the pits, "would be fantastic," he says.

Rosetta left Earth in 2004 and trekked through space for a decade before reaching comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in August 2014 and slipping into orbit.

Orbiting a comet was a major first for science; the mission achieved another unprecedented success a few months later, when Rosetta deployed a small probe that touched down on the comet's surface.

Unfortunately, anchors on the probe failed and it bounced a couple of times before finally coming to rest in a shadowy crevice. The probe, called Philae, lasted only a few days after that, because its solar panels couldn't get enough sunlight to recharge its batteries. Researchers were still able to retrieve valuable images and information.

ESA only recently figured out exactly where Philae ended up, and Rosetta will be laid to rest not too far away, on the "head" of the comet that's shaped like a rubber duck.

The time Rosetta spent orbiting this comet has given scientists an unprecedented opportunity to watch one of these icy bodies in detail as it approaches the sun. Most previous comet missions only flew past a comet (one spacecraft, Deep Impact, deliberately collided with a comet), which meant that scientists could retrieve data for only a few hours or days.

Planning for the mission began in the 1980s, says Taylor.

"You're looking at over 30 years to get you to a science target. It takes time and effort," he says. "There are scientists and engineers who have spent their lifetime working on this mission."

Comets interest scientists because these complicated icebergs could shed light on our solar system's beginnings. "Comets are the best preserved samples of solar system material from the origin," says Paul Weissman, a scientist with the Rosetta mission at the Planetary Science Institute. "They've been totally unmodified since 4.5 billion years ago, when the planets and the sun formed."

He says Rosetta has already turned up a lot of surprises. For example, researchers previously thought comets had only small, active areas on the surface that spewed jets of dust and gas.

"It turns out, almost all of the surface is active," Weissman says, "but it's active at a very low level. So it's a very different mechanism than what we previously thought. This is going to send everybody back to the drawing boards to understand how this mechanism works."

When Rosetta finally hits the comet's surface, it will be going slow enough that its "controlled landing" isn't likely to destroy it, even though it won't be able to talk to Earth.

"It will only hit at about a meter per second — which is walking speed," Weissman says. "So imagine yourself walking into a wall, at just walking speed. It wouldn't damage you very much."

Scientists will continue to analyze the data gathered by Rosetta for years to come. Meanwhile, the spacecraft and its lander will continue their journey, riding on the comet's surface indefinitely.

"They will stay where they are, as best we can expect," says Weissman. The comet should travel that way through the inner solar system for the next half-million years, he says, only to be ejected by Jupiter, eventually, to a much more distant orbit.

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ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

The icy surface of a comet will soon get smacked by a spacecraft named Rosetta. Rosetta has been orbiting the comet for more than two years. And as NPR's Nell Greenfieldboyce reports, this historic mission is about to come to a dramatic end.

NELL GREENFIELDBOYCE, BYLINE: Matt Taylor is the mission's project scientist at the European Space Agency, and he doesn't know how he'll feel tomorrow morning when Rosetta plunges down to the comet.

MATT TAYLOR: There's mixed emotions here. You know, it's people who have invested their lives and their mentality I think as well, their psychology on this mission.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: Previous missions just flew by comets quickly. But in the 1980s, researchers began dreaming of doing an in-depth study by traveling along with one of these cosmic ice balls. Rosetta launched in 2004. It traveled for 10 years and about 4 billion miles to catch up with the comet. In 2014, it finally slipped into orbit.

TAYLOR: It was an adventure. It was doing something daring. It was doing something ridiculous, in fact. We're flying around a comet.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: A few months later, Rosetta achieved another historic first. It deployed a washing-machine-sized probe called Philae that touched down on the comet's surface.

(APPLAUSE)

GREENFIELDBOYCE: Controllers in Germany went crazy with joy, but then they realized that Philae's anchors had failed. Philae bounced a couple of times and ended up in some shadowy crevice that kept sunlight from its solar panels. Its exact resting place was only spotted a few weeks ago in a photo taken by Rosetta.

TAYLOR: Psychologically it was a great relief to have an unambiguous identification of the location of the lander.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: The lander did live for a few days - long enough to gather unprecedented images and data. Paul Weissman is a mission scientist with the Planetary Science Institute.

PAUL WEISSMAN: You have to, you know, look at the glass as being half full not half empty. On the whole I think it was a tremendous success.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: He says comets are fascinating because they're the leftovers from the process that formed earth and the other planets, and they basically haven't changed in 4 and a half billion years.

WEISSMAN: Comets are the best preserved samples of solar system material from the origin.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: This particular comet is shaped sort of like a rubber duck. Rosetta's grand finale will put it in a freefall towards the duck's head. It will send back data and images in real time all the way down. Weissman says the end won't be a spectacular explosion. Rosetta will be going pretty slow - about the speed of a person walking.

WEISSMAN: Imagine yourself walking into a wall. It wouldn't damage you very much.

GREENFIELDBOYCE: But the spacecraft will tilt. Its antenna will stop pointing at Earth, and Rosetta will go silent. Nell Greenfieldboyce, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.